Friday, August 6, 2010

Vacation Bible School

Our church provided and served the meal Thursday evening at VBS. Thanks to Allawayne, Elaine, Linda, Jill, and Barbara.


Thursday was "yellow night", and First Christian folks were very creative with wearing yellow.

Thanks to Dawn, Amanda, Dave, Jill, Scott, Amanda, and Barbara for helping with the children each night.





The Gardener

The Garden of Eden by Lucas Cranach (1536)


The Gardener
by Ken Weisner


You get down on your knees in the dark earth—alone
for hours in hot sun, yanking weed roots, staking trellises,
burning your shoulders, swatting gnats; you strain your muscled
Midwestern neck and back, callous your pianist's hands.

You cut roses back so they won't fruit, rip out and replace
spent annuals. You fill your garden dense with roots and vines.
And when a humble sprout climbs like a worm up out of death,
you are there to bless it, in your green patch, all spring and summer long,

Hose like a scepter, a reliquary vessel; you hum
through the dreamy wilderness—no one to judge, absolve,
or be absolved—purified by labor, confessed by its whisperings, connected to its innocence. So when you heft a woody, brushy tangle, or stumble

Inside grimy, spent by earth, I see all the sacraments in place—
and the redeemed world never smelled so sweet.

Wednesday, August 4, 2010

Experiencing the Social Justice Tradition and the Compassionate Life: Building a Community of Hope in Carroll County

Romans 5:1-5; 8:16-25; Colossians 1:24-29

The Apostle Paul wrote to the Colossian Christians:1:24 Now I rejoice in my sufferings for your sake, and in my flesh I am filling up what is lacking in Christ's afflictions for the sake of his body, that is, the church, 25 of which I became a minister according to the stewardship from God that was given to me for you, to make the word of God fully known, 26 the mystery hidden for ages and generations but now revealed to his saints. 27 To them God chose to make known how great among the Gentiles are the riches of the glory of this mystery, which is Christ in you, the hope of glory. 28 Him we proclaim, warning everyone and teaching everyone with all wisdom, that we may present everyone mature in Christ. 29 For this I toil, struggling with all his energy that he powerfully works within me.

The Apostle Paul says that, in his house arrest in Rome, he is “filling up what is lacking in Christ's afflictions for the sake of…the church.” Now, Paul does not mean that there was any insufficiency in Christ’s sacrificial death on the cross. Not at all. All he means is that the church needs to embody Christ’s self-giving love in new ways in every time and place, so that people can see the reality of it afresh. The world needs to see Christ embodied in believers, embodied in acts of compassion, for Christ embodied in us is our hope of glory, our hope that God can and will restore us as his children. Paul lives and works for this goal, enduring suffering with hopefulness, so that he may present those under his spiritual influence as mature in Christ. In all times and places, the church needs to live with integrity, with self-giving love, and with contagious, solidly grounded, hopefulness.

Here at First Christian Church of Berryville, we say that our mission is to build a community of hope through Jesus Christ. What is hope? Hope is more than wishful thinking.

When I was eight years old, I had five long-term desires for my life: (1) that I was going to be a famous major league baseball pitcher, (2) that I was going to be for the milkweed plant the kind of chemurgist that George Washington Carver was for the peanut, (3) that I was going to be an ornithologist/artist of the stature of Roger Tory Peterson, (4) that I was going to be the kind of President of the United States who ends up on Mt. Rushmore, and (5) that I was going to be a preacher with influence as broad as Billy Graham’s. I was not going to have to choose among these options. I was going to do them all, either simultaneously or by turns. I need not tell you that those desires were not solid hope, but were merely groundless, wishful thinking. When I had begun to mature as a Christian, not one of those daydreams remained as my deepest desire…although I occasionally still indulge them—Walter Mitty fashion--as fantasies that pop up from the depths of my mind. My most entertaining fantasy is becoming the first rookie pitching star who is simultaneously drawing social security. Of course, I would have to learn to play baseball first, a small obstacle to overcome. The point is that wishful fantasies are not what I mean by hope.

Hope is the well-founded, confident expectation that something really good that is not yet apparent will emerge to fulfill our best and deepest desires. When I say that this hope is not yet apparent, I mean that we hold this hope even as we go through human vulnerability and suffering, even as we groan in agony over the fact that we still fall short of the glory of God, even as we are all too aware that we are not yet what were created to be, even as the purpose for which God created us is not yet fully actualized. Still we confidently expect that better things are coming, preferably already in this life, but if not in this life, then at least in the next.

For Christians, the confident expectation is not groundless, the confident expectation is not grandiose like my childhood fantasies, and the confident expectation is not in ourselves. Rather, our hope is rooted and grounded in what has been revealed through Jesus Christ regarding God’s reigning wisdom, holiness, love, and power…and our hope is rooted in our actual experience of well-balanced, daily Christian living. Our confident expectation emerges from spiritual growth through Bible study, prayer, worship, fellowship, and the rest of The 9 Ways.

Our Christian hope flowers when we live our lives as immersed in Christ and when he is being formed in us more and more each day. Our Christian hope is in the experienced fact that Christ is gradually equipping us to do his work of building hope in others. The hope of Christ moving through us touches the lives of many other people in many ways.

I want to say that hope is a matter of social justice. There is nothing more oppressive than a lack of hope, nothing more liberating than adding solid hope to someone’s life.

I want to talk about the many ways that hope is flowering through the ministries of First Christian Church.

Let’s start with the Loaves and Fishes Food Pantry. When a family is at the end of its rope, f-o-o-d spells hope. This congregation has labored long and given generously to support Loaves and Fishes. The number of families who have been sustained in their hope is beyond calculation, but it is highly significant. Even if you are one of the volunteers or donors, let’s all join in applauding those around us this morning who have joined energy and resources to make possible this outpouring of hope. Recently, our volunteer energies have been stretched pretty thin. There is no shame in letting other congregations help fill our gaps. But keep this in mind: the other congregations that have historically supported Loaves and Fishes are also experiencing the stretching of their volunteer energies, some more severely than we are. We need some folks praying and thinking about creative ways to expand the human resources and food resources of Loaves and Fishes. If we want to go farther in building hope for the families being helped by Loaves and Fishes, we need to be thinking about how we can help them with a hand up as well as a hand out. Can we help them with job skills? Can we help them find home-based ways to supplement their income? Can we help them with gardening, cooking, and food preservation skills? Can we help them with financial planning? Can we help them with family relational skills? Can we help them establish a stronger spiritual foundation for their lives? Can we stimulate conversations within and beyond this congregation on what comes next for Loaves and Fishes? Can we deepen our prayer on such matters? I am not trying to pile more burdens on the already over-burdened volunteers. I am trying to stimulate visions that will bring more people, more energy, and more resources into the battle for hope. We need to be talking to our friends within and especially beyond this congregation about all the possibilities. There are lots of people out there, some of them Christians who are not affiliated with a church, who want to make a tangible difference for the better. If they see and hear that First Christian Church is about making a tangible difference, about building a community of hope through Jesus Christ, they may join their energy and resources with ours. They may even supply new creative vision and new leadership. We have to show by our conversations and by our actions that we care. This is a matter of social justice.

Let’s think about families, youth, and children. It is not just here in Berryville, but all across our culture, that families, youth, and children are in crisis. Like many earlier times in history—for instance, the 1790’s or the 1920’s—we are proving that life without a spiritual and moral foundation does not work. Our education systems reflect the lostness of our whole culture. I am not attacking our schools—they have a tough, perhaps impossible task in trying to compensate for the broken homes from which their students come. And since, in our pluralistic culture, they are unable to speak with moral and spiritual authority, they are trying to fight with their hands tied behind their backs. But it is apparent that there are many children and youth for whom our education systems are not working. How do we pour some hope for something better into the lives around us? I do not have statistics, but I believe it probable that First Christian Church is attracting far more unchurched youth to our mid-week youth program than any other long-established congregation in this community. It comes as a bit of a shock to some of us. Some of us—maybe most of us--prefer not to see the signs of brokenness so openly displayed among us. But take a look at Jesus. The perfect Son of God did not pull back from the messiness of life. He did not insist that those who came to him know how to do things with social propriety before they offered their hearts and their service to him. He was willing to take a lot of heat for that. Christ is still at work. I believe that he is at work in our youth ministry. And he is still taking heat. Let’s just be sure that the heat he is taking is not coming from us. Can we use more help? You bet. Do we need more critics? Probably not. We will not help by standing back and remembering through a golden glow how we did things in the 1950’s, 1960’s, 1970’s, or 1980’s, and then wondering why we are not still doing things that way. Even 1990 was a generation ago. What we did then had to be designed to work then, and, to be honest, our best efforts did not always work then. Youth ministry is messy and unpredictable in any generation. We are entering the second decade of the twenty-first century. What we do now has to be designed to work now. Let’s get about the task of building a community of hope that includes youth and children. This is a matter of social justice.

The Gulf oil spill which dominated the news for a time is receding from the lead story on the evening news and the front page of the local paper. It was and is and will remain a great tragedy, but it should call to our attention that the practices and policies of industrial agriculture have been killing the Gulf for decades now, sending topsoil and fertilizer down the Mississippi. Not only that, but those same policies and practices have been killing the soil of our farmlands, killing family farms themselves, killing the rural towns that once served those farm families, killing all of us as we eat the subsidized high fructose corn syrup and similar products that emerge from our agriculture industry, and depending heavily on petroleum at all stages of the process, petroleum that is itself costing us heavily at all levels of our lives. Diversified, sustainable agriculture and local food economies are the answer to many of the problems that face us. Our church community garden may not seem like much of an answer to such huge problems, but our garden is like a signpost calling our attention to the shape of the solution. I am convinced that our garden fits very closely with our biblical and Christian values. I am also convinced that it fits with our mission of building a community of hope. Perhaps we can welcome into our church people who are looking for such a sign of hope and who in turn can help us enlarge the impact we make in supporting increased opportunities for employment in our local economy. It is a matter of social justice.

Last week, I asserted that the modern Christian social justice movement emerged from the evangelical tradition and the holiness tradition. These three traditions compose the subtopics of our mission statement. The evangelical tradition is represented in “drawing people to Jesus.” The holiness tradition is represented in “becoming more like Jesus” and the social justice tradition is represented in “doing the work of Jesus.” Last week I bemoaned how the church has suffered for well over a century by the splitting apart of the social justice tradition from the evangelical and holiness traditions. Both sides of the split have suffered from that. I see hope that this is turning around, that the chasm is being bridged by the latest generation of young evangelicals who are less judgmental, less dogmatic, less narrowly focused on private morality, and more aware of the social justice concerns that are rooted in the Bible. I pray that this may be so. Whether it is so or not, there is nothing that keeps us right here and right now from taking a holistic approach to Christian spirituality. We will be spiritually healthier when we are living out a well-rounded Christian life represented by the six streams of living water, and the social justice tradition will both draw strength from and contribute strength to that healthy combination.

Let me conclude with an example of how the streams work together: My father was not an active church person through my growing up years on the farm. His excuse was that the church was filled with hypocrites, and that there were people outside the church as good as those in the church. He finally dropped his excuses and became actively involved when he saw two things: (1) he saw rural churches overcoming traditional antagonisms and cooperating to offer more effective ministry and to help slow the decline of rural communities, (2) he saw Heifer Project International taking practical self-help steps to make life better in impoverished countries. As a result of reconnecting with the church, my father began rapid spiritual growth that showed up in study, service, personal formation, and general life satisfaction. His seeing the social justice tradition in action gave him hope and spurred the rest of his spiritual growth.

It can happen again. It can happen right here and right now. Our efforts to carry tangible hope to people in despair can make a difference. Let us embrace our calling.

Tuesday, July 27, 2010

Discovering the Social Justice Tradition and the Compassionate Life: Making a Difference

Isaiah 1:15-17; Luke 4:16-21; Acts 4:32-37

Not long ago, a well-known media personality urged Christians to leave their churches if they found the term social justice on their church website. His reasoning: Communists and Nazis both used the term social justice. The flaw in his reasoning: We would have to give up all our good ideas if we ran from each idea that has been misused by some unwise group or some ungodly group. A valid kernel in his reasoning: Some churches, not only liberal, but also conservative, advocate for partisan social causes that they would better leave outside the church. A strong counter to his reasoning: Anyone who carefully reads the Bible should conclude that concern for social justice is essential to the faithful people of God.

The opening books of the Bible make clear that God created human beings to work together in community to care for creation, to sustain the good and varied richness that God has created for our sustenance and enjoyment, and to remember that we are indeed responsible for the well-being of our spouses, our children, our brothers and sisters, our parents, our neighbors, and even the strangers and aliens residing among us. Our basic assignment as God’s children is to represent God’s nature and heart and purposes, and that assignment has not changed in its essence through all the millennia of human history. Working for social justice is part of our reason-for-being as children of God.

The Old Testament is clear that social justice is to be embodied in the community life of the people of God. Their religious calendar included a Sabbath day every seventh day providing rest from human endeavors and labor (applying even to indentured servants and working beasts), a Sabbath year every seventh year providing rest for the land from cultivation and relief for debtors and indentured servants from their condition, and a Jubilee year every fiftieth year for returning citizens to ownership of their share of family property. The basic social justice point is that no one was to be left indebted or indentured forever, that no one was to be left without inheritance or without hope for a new beginning, that no one was to be prevented from drawing near God in faith and repentance, seeking healing, blessing, and empowerment. Although it seems likely that these laws were seldom if ever fully enforced, the Old Testament prophets repeatedly railed against those who schemed to defeat the purposes of such laws, who sold the righteous for silver, the needy for a pair of sandals, who trampled the head of the poor into the dust and turned aside from the afflicted. The words of Amos echo through the ages, “Let justice roll down like waters and righteousness like an everflowing stream.” Nothing in the New Testament eliminates that high valuing of social justice. The realities of human corruption, of urbanization and division of labor, and of invading foreign empires made the Jubilee laws impracticable, but did not invalidate their purpose.

Jesus announced a new way of implementing the purpose of the Jubilee laws, through caring communities of faith, in which each believer is given spiritual gifts to use for the well-being of the whole community and in which the community sees to it that its opportunities and resources are appropriately distributed. The church is Spirit-anointed to follow Jesus in proclaiming good news to the poor and liberty to the captives and the oppressed.

There were places in the first century A.D. in which Christians were, because of their faith, cut out of the economic life of the larger community, places in which their very survival depended on their developing a secondary local economy in which they supported the enterprises of one another so that they could continue to live and bear witness in the larger community to the goodness of their Lord Jesus. These Christians demonstrated extraordinary resourcefulness and generosity in keeping their fellow believers and their Christian mission afloat. Luke says that the early Christians in Jerusalem did not consider anything their own, but as belonging as needed to the fellowship and mission of their crucified Savior and risen Lord.

Acts 4:32-37:Now the full number of those who believed were of one heart and soul, and no one said that any of the things that belonged to him was his own, but they had everything in common. And with great power the apostles were giving their testimony to the resurrection of the Lord Jesus, and great grace was upon them all. There was not a needy person among them, for as many as were owners of lands or houses sold them and brought the proceeds of what was sold and laid it at the apostles' feet, and it was distributed to each as any had need. Thus Joseph, who was also called by the apostles Barnabas (which means son of encouragement), a Levite, a native of Cyprus, sold a field that belonged to him and brought the money and laid it at the apostles' feet.”

Imagine how that attitude of viewing nothing as our own would revolutionize our churches today!

Pursuing social justice is not a matter of being politically liberal or conservative. We can hold any number of views on what the government ought to do about social problems, and still agree that the people of God must devote their energies and resources toward correcting real injustices that are contrary to the heart of our loving Creator and Redeemer. We may favor or oppose any variety of government remedies, and this still does not relieve us of the personal obligation to make a positive difference in the name of our Savior and Lord Jesus Christ.

When I say that churches ought not be involved in politics, I am not saying that individual Christians ought not be involved in politics. My concern is that churches not divide themselves along political lines and that churches not hinder their outreach to unbelievers by making a politically biased presentation of the gospel. Wise government policies can be of some help, but high Christian ideals are never totally achieved through political means. Never has happened, never will. There is always work left for the church. Our job together as the church is to do the work of Jesus.

Although I like to see churches steer clear of political advocacy, churches must be involved in concerns of social justice. Christian hearts must indeed be sensitized to the plight of victims of injustice, or we are not representing the heart of our Creator and Redeemer, which is the purpose for which God created and redeemed us.

Today in Protestant circles, concern for social justice is sometimes associated with theological liberals, people who do not really believe in the Bible or in the biblical God. But, prior to the time that skeptical, liberal Bible scholarship came to the forefront in the mid-nineteenth century, most Americans who were strong Christians, whether Methodist, Presbyterian, Baptist, or members of our Stone-Campbell Restoration Movement, swam in both the evangelical and the holiness streams of living water, and were encouraged to swim in the social justice stream as well. This made sense because the founding figures of the three streams—evangelical, holiness, and social justice--were the same people, people like Nicolas von Zinzendorf, John and Charles Wesley, John Newton, and a generation later, our own Barton Stone.

I will give two historical examples of the combined evangelical/holiness/social justice streams.

The first example comes from a little more than a forty year period in England, from about 1792 through 1833, the generation after von Zinzendorf, Wesley, and Newton. A group of activist Christians began to buy or build houses in Clapham, England, a village in a natural setting then still a few miles south of London. Most, though not all of them were Anglicans, but their theology was evangelical and their personal spirituality and morality was of the holiness type. Most, though not all of them, were wealthy. The wealthy supported the Christian labors of those who were not. Their motive in living together was to offer mutual encouragement in Christian living and in implementing certain Christian goals for social justice. Their Christian faith was so much part of their motivating energy that opponents derisively dubbed them “the Clapham sect,” or “the Clapham saints.” The best known member of this circle was William Wilberforce, but there were something like two dozen other members of the circle who made major contributions to their work on behalf of spiritual, moral, and social causes. In over four decades of labor, this little group supported the emergence of world missions, of Bible translation and Bible distribution organizations, of the Sunday school movement and the Sunday observance movement, of broader schooling and Christian social work among the poor. They campaigned against blood sports, dueling, gambling, and cruelty to animals. Politically, they sought to reform Britain’s governance of India and the related actions of the East India Tea Company, they sought to reform England’s prisons, they brought into being the African country of Sierra Leone, and most notably, they did more than any other group in history to bring down slavery not only in the British Empire, but also worldwide. Yes, their most publicized actions may have been political, but, while their political actions were taken with Christian motivations, they were not taken, so far as I know, in the name of the church. My point is that their social justice labors emerged from evangelical tradition faith and from holiness tradition spirituality. It was because of the richness of their faith and spirituality that the Clapham saints made such a difference for social justice.

Just before the time that work of the Clapham saints was winding down in England, the work in America of Charles G. Finney was beginning. Finney was the foremost revivalist and the leading evangelical and holiness spokesperson in America from the mid-1820’s for another forty to fifty years. My University of Chicago American history professor who listed Jonathan Edwards as one of the two most influential Americans in our entire history, listed Charles Finney as the other. My professor believed that Finney produced more lasting change in 19th century American life than any other person. It has been estimated that over half a million converts to Christ were won at Finney’s revivals and that 80% remained strong Christians for the rest of their lives, and that does not begin to count those who came to Christ through the efforts of those Finney taught and influenced. Finney encouraged his converts to work for social reform in the areas such as health, temperance, sexual morality, Sunday observance, women’s rights, the abolition of slavery, and the humane treatment of prisoners, the insane, and the handicapped, a list very similar to the previous work of the Clapham saints back in England. Why was Finney’s work so successful? Beyond his obvious gifts for communication, it was his deep spiritual life that made the difference. And it was the spiritual life he conveyed to others that produced so many workers for social justice in the second and third quarters of the nineteenth century.

Then, in the latter half of the nineteenth century and opening decades of the twentieth century, liberal, skeptical Bible scholarship emerged and split the church. The theological liberals proclaimed what they called the social gospel, but lost the biblical gospel that could win souls to Christ. The theological conservatives kept the emphasis on personal evangelism and personal morality, but drew back from the social dimensions of their previous work which they now saw as tainted by theological liberalism. The conservatives tended to slip into judgmental self-righteousness, to which the liberals responded with a culturally elitist self-righteousness of their own. The chasm kept widening. That sad state of affairs endured for more than a century, and how much poorer we American Christians are because the spiritual streams were separated.

We are at last seeing the emergence of a new generation of evangelicals with a social justice agenda that includes, not only opposing abortion, but also alleviating poverty, advocating creation care, peacemaking, prison reform, and refugee relief. Many young evangelicals appear to be re-uniting the evangelical, holiness, and social justice streams. May their tribe increase!

Let me tell you what I believe about our times; I believe:

1. that the American people are discovering that many of the solutions to our problems will not come from government or from the other large institutions that fund our two major political parties, but will emerge from the grassroots.

2. that, as we choose simpler and healthier lifestyles, live closer to our neighbors, and live on a more human scale, our lives will be more meaningful and more fulfilling.

3. that our hope for better lives is closely tied to the teachings of Moses and the Prophets, of Jesus and the Apostles, and especially closely tied to the purpose of Jesus for his church, that we are to be bearers of new hope to the world.

4. that the mission statement of our church, “Building a Community of Hope through Jesus Christ,” is especially well-suited to our time and place and compels us to be about Jesus’ work of social justice.

5. that, if we truly choose to follow God’s leading right here and right now, we can make a profound impact for the better on Carroll County and beyond, both now and in the future.

6. that we will be most effective if we operate with the force of all six streams of living water in harmonious cooperation. My point for today has been that the evangelical, holiness, and social justice streams of Christian spirituality definitely belong together, not in opposing camps. Let’s get past our prejudices and take a holistic, biblical viewpoint that will make a real difference for the better right here, beginning right now.

Preparing the Garden for Fall

Spinach is a typical fall crop.

Although it has been hot enough to keep our thoughts on summer and air conditioning, many of the plantings sown this Spring are finished for the year and its time to prepare for fall. The corn that Kari Keever planted in early May has all been picked and the stocks have been ripped out and composted. Spinach has been planted where the corn was and your gardeners will be putting in lettuce and other greens as soon as the heat dies down a little.


Garden Manager Kari Keever

Kari Keever, seen above, is weeding beans and picking them. We've had good luck with beans this year and one of the lessons learned this year is to replicate our luck in future seasons. Consequently, we're going to skip planting squash (they take up too much room!) and plant fewer cucumbers--and devote the space they had to spuds, flowers and, of course, to those tasty string beans.

Needed: We need four (4) wooden truck pallets to expand our compost pile. If you are able to donate pallets please drop them off at the garden or--contact Dan and he'll pick them up.

Dumbo's Stewardship Lesson continued

From one of Dumbo's pastors,

If you see something that we regularly need that is worn out or used up, it is best to talk to someone who would know if the solution is already underway.

Elaine West is authorized to use the church credit card. She buys various church supplies on a fairly frequent basis and often knows what is underway.

Otherwise:

For any church property matters, the chair of the Facilities Standing Committee is Joe Mills. Robert West who has done this job in the past can also help you. Talk to Joe or Robert.

For Discipleship supplies, talk to Barbara Hale.

For Worship supplies, talk to Candy Scheller.

For Friendship and Hospitality supplies, talk to Mary Ann Bell.

For Compassion and Evangelism supplies, talk to Susan Krotz.

For Office supplies, talk to the Board Chair Loretta Tanner.

If you want to be helpful, just ask appropriate permission to purchase the item yourself.

If you buy it yourself, save your receipt and give it to Doug Carr who keeps the church check book (or put it in the treasurer's mail slot in the office). Write on the receipt or an attached note anything needed to clarify the nature of the purchase, and label it something like "Facilities Supplies," "Office Supplies" "Kitchen Supplies," "Worship Supplies," "Discipleship Supplies," etc. Doug will get a reimbursement check to you.

We actually prefer that you get reimbursed. This enables us to track the costs of our operations.

If you wish to cover the cost of something, it is better to get reimbursed and then simply put a little extra in the offering plate to cover it. This also makes it easier for you to claim your tax deduction.

Saturday, July 24, 2010

Dumbo Gets a Lesson in Stewardship

Our New Garden Hose

Our most mentally challenged member noticed last summer that the garden hose next to the kitchen steps was on its last legs--but of course he didn't do anything about it. Today, as he stumbled around the church yard, he noticed a brand new hose and got to thinking about it in terms of stewardship...and his own deficiencies in that regard.

The new garden hose didn't get there by accident. How did it happen?

First was observation. Someone was aware of his or her surroundings and noticed a change in the environment. In this case, they noticed that the old church hose was past it's sell by date. Second, he or she had knowledge about "who to see" or who to get permission from in order to replace the hose. It is possible that they simply acted independently and made an on the spot assessment and applied corrective action. But in either case, they knew who to see, or what was an acceptable action. Third, they cared enough to want to improve a situation or thing so, finally and fourth, they acted and replaced the old hose.

"Why didn't Dumbo," he asked himself, "replace the hose?" He summarized the problem and decided that stewardship involves:

  1. Observation
  2. Knowledge (of who to see or what to do)
  3. Care
  4. Action

"In my case," Dumbo concluded, "I didn't know that it was okay to just go ahead and replace the hose. I lacked knowledge of what is allowed and not allowed."

Dumbo finished stumbling about, but felt right smart. He understood that in the future he needed to 1) be a better observer of what is around him; 2) to learn more about the approval process--who to see and who to ask; 3) to care more, and more effectively, and; 4) to take action and "git it done."

So: Whoever replaced the old garden hose, THANK YOU. You are a good steward.